May 16th, 2019
Irish Rail has updated its vegetation management policy to ensure that site
specific risk assessments are carried out if any tree or hedge cutting is being considered during the nesting season.
The
Wildlife Act currently restricts the cutting, burning or destruction of
vegetation on uncultivated land or in hedges or ditches during the nesting and
breeding season for birds and wildlife from 1 March to 31 August.
The move
comes after Green Party representative Pippa Hackett raised concerns with “many
incidences of severe hedge trimming” and hedge removal during the cutting
season along the rail line in her native Co Offaly.
“What I
have witnessed over the past week in Co Offaly, close to my home, has been
catastrophic for our birds and biodiversity,” she said in late April, raising
the issue directly with Irish Rail.
Instead of acting, Ms Hackett said that Irish Rail “began their decimation” of mature hedge on the other side of the track the following week.
“Never have
I witnessed such wanton hedgerow destruction at the height of the nesting
season, with hedges on the point of bloom. Nests, chicks, and biodiversity have
been mulched to the ground.
“We are in an era of climate breakdown and biodiversity loss, all caused by humans. Ireland’s landscape is no exception. It is a travesty that a state-owned company like Irish Rail should commit such an act of deliberate destruction on our environment. It is unforgivable,” Ms Hackett added.
With regard to the recent work on the Portarlington to Athlone section of the railway, the Minister for Transport Shane Ross TD said that the availability of contractor resources to undertake the works “resulted in hedges and trees being cut a number of weeks into the nesting season”.
“The
company determined that the safety of the line necessitated the continuation of
the works, even though this meant that they were undertaken later than
originally intended,” Mr Ross said.
From now on, Mr Ross said, Irish Rail will require a “specific site risk assessment to be carried out” if such works are to be considered during the nesting season.
This will
enable the company to assess if the works can be delayed until after the nesting
season, he said, and to consider if “less intrusive mitigation works” could be
carried out in the short term.
Ms Hackett told The Green News that she is “delighted” that Irish Rail has changed its approach and that it “shows the power of people” to raise awareness of these issues and bring about change.
“I was
contacted by so many people from all over the country, and the outrage and
frustration was very evident,” she said.
Hopefully, Irish Rail will embrace this new direction, and other organisations might follow suit and treat our natural environments with the respect it deserves. This is a small but significant victory for nature.”
Photos of vegetation cutting at both University College Dublin (UCD) and Trinity College Dublin (TCD) emerged on social media this week.
The Green Party’s Lorna Bogue also challenged Kildare County Council this week over the cutting of hedgerows during the nesting season as part of the M7 upgrade.
Earlier this month, two men in Co Laois were
convicted under the Wildlife Act for hedgerow destruction during the nesting
season.
The offences included the wilful
destruction of birds’ nests and the destruction of vegetation growing in a hedge
in late May 2017 in Clogrenan, Co Laois.
According to data
released to The Green News under Access to Information on the
Environment regulations, the NPWS has brought just over 30 cases linked to
illegal hedgerow or vegetation cutting or removal since 2010.
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